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Osiris
Feb 4th, 2013, 03:24 PM
All right you dirty sluicing parakeets! Because everyone forgets about the blogs (and at Kc's request) I'm re-posting this here for those who never scroll down. Please, ladies and gents, there are a number of bloggers on the site that work quite hard, and end up with little to no recognition. Readership plummets, and feedback is the only way that they know people are listening. Take a moment and explore! There's so much to read!

You can find the original here (http://www.zombiepodcast.com/forum/entry.php?347-Defining-A-Pandemic-The-Elusive-Perfect-Chapter).


DISCLAIMER: The following blog may contain material some may consider to be spoiler worthy. It is recommended that you read at your own risk. I could claim responsibility for you not paying attention to this warning, but I won't. That said, I'm going to forego any further warnings of spoilers within the blog.

I'd also like to take a brief moment to apologize for my absence over the last few months? Has it been months since the last issue? I can't remember. Doesn't matter, I'm back and I've got a lot of ground to cover and a lot of lost time to make up for. Enough cheese, let's get to the meat.

It was recently put to the community, via Facebook and Twitter, which chapter should be submitted for consideration in an unnamed contest. What a question! There’s so many to choose from! It’s like asking someone, “Which of the following women is hottest?” and then handing them a copy of FHM’s 100 hottest women. It’s too subjective, it’s too broad a question. So we’re given the restrictions of choosing from chapters twenty-five through thirty-six—as if that’s going to make it easier to narrow it down.

You’re a mean one for doing this to me, Kc. Terribly mean.

My initial reaction was to go with one of those big moment chapters. The kind where something is revealed, something I’ve been waiting to hear for so long! That first reaction was to choose Chapter Twenty-Nine– Beyond Our Walls, the chapter that answers the burning question: Did Burt make it out alive? I considered the chapter that gives us the most human look at the most-roundly-hated character in the We’re Alive world: Chapter Thirty-One – Family Ties. The season finale makes a good case for itself as well. But in the end, one chapter stands out above the rest.

Chapter Twenty-Seven – The Thirty-First

It’s by far the most cohesive chapter in the entire series. It has one of the best performances of the series, great big ups to Kevin Flood for that. It’s a whole lot of exposition, sure, but it’s not needless. It gives you a compelling story from start to finish. Frankly, it’s the one chapter of the entire series that stands on its own in more ways than one. It would be the one, single chapter of the story that would be perfectly suited for novelization, as it is Kalani’s story in toto. Sure, it answers the question we’d all been asking: Who’s the rat? It doesn’t just tell us the who, but it tells us the why. It gives us something that the other chapters don’t give us, a complete portrait of a man’s story of survival, all in one shot. There isn’t another chapter that pulls that off. You get bits and pieces of history from characters, but nothing like twenty-seven gives us.

It also provides us with an experience that no other chapter gives us. It gives us a taste of the cast in its entirety. Each of the main characters has interaction with the chapter’s central protagonist. It gives us all the action you could ask for. It gives you a chance to experience a range of emotion. It moves not only through time, but through space, taking the listener from Hawaii to Los Angeles, from the airport to the mall, from the mall, and then from one tower to the next. You meet new and old characters in a way that feels natural, and makes sense. There’s a linear feel to the story that just feels right. It’s a single arc told from various perspectives, but the central protagonist remains constant in his voice, his choices, and his motivation. There is a simplicity to the complex nature of this episode, as much exposition as it’s giving us, at its heart it is just a story about a man who loves his daughter, and will stop at nothing to save her life. It’s a brilliant piece of writing on Kc’s part, and deserves far more recognition than it gets. He’s taken an almost convoluted bit of plot, and smoothed out the wrinkles, slowed it down, and fed it to us like a campfire tale. The pacing is beautiful; the sound design supports the story in a way that really is far more subtle than other chapters, from the sound-effects to the music—oh don’t get me started on the music!

The chapter unfolds like a great novel. It drops you into a lifeboat on the middle of the ocean with a bunch of strangers, and then pokes a hole in it. Imagine for a moment that you were given a paperback called “The Thirty-First” by a friend. You read the blurb on the back:

“Kalani is a pilot, a skill that comes in handy when the world ends. A catastrophic viral outbreak hits his home in Hawaii, forcing him and his daughter to flee the state. He manages to rescue a group of survivors, flying them into Los Angeles, only to discover that the plague has already brought the city to its knees, and when his daughter is kidnapped, and held for ransom, Kalani is forced to do anything and everything to get her back.”


Now, sit down and experience the chapter again. It’s an amazing tale of survival, treachery, loss, and redemption. The arc of the character is not only defined, but brought to resolution, a feat that no other chapter can boast. It’s an impressive piece of storytelling. I’ve sung Kevin’s praises in another blog, but there’s no harm in reiterating. His performance is pitch-perfect.

To be entirely inclusive with regard to Kalani’s complete arc, it would be necessary to include parts one and two of chapter twenty-eight into the mix, along with the last half of chapter 25. I would argue that this story would have been better served as a single ninety-eight minute drama, considering it is the only story line that has tied up all its loose ends. See, this is where it all falls apart, because you really do need Kalani’s redemption, which I had forgotten was not included in his confessional.

That said, the story in The Thirty-First still stands on its own. Damn you for making me defeat my own argument. Sound off—if you’re still reading—and tell me which season three chapter that really defines We’re Alive, showcases its strengths, and the talents of the cast and crew?




Osiris—formerly known as Satan—
enjoys long walks on the beach, dramatic
readings of grocery lists, and Elmore Leonard.

CantWaitForSeason3
Feb 4th, 2013, 05:49 PM
while the thirty first is a great chapter. it does lack all of Kalani's story.

when reviewing through the episodes, ive come to the decision that Chapter 33 Red Winter would be the best single chapter to represent the series. The chapter explains most of the current situation in season 3: zombie apocalypse, Fort Irwin, Boulder and the new soldier zombies. It begins with a slow intoduction into Micheal, Puck, Riley, Col Kimmet, and Tanya. The drama of the chapter begins with the helicopter crash. Carl and Robins add action and survival into the chapter when they engaged the zombies at the crash. The drama is increased by sneaking the body of a numbered one back to Fort Irwin. The examination of a numbered one shows that the survivors are not as safe as they think they are and that the worst is only to come. The excitement of the numbered one is climaxed when its reveled that there is a possible infected unaccounted for. The Chapter ends on a great cliffhanger when Boulder is out of reach and that the infected could have made its way there.

Chapter 33 Red Winter shows all the best parts of Were Alive: great characters, zombies, survival, action and drama. In this chapter the worst enemy of the season is revealed and shows how ill-prepared the survivors are to the new threat.

Witch_Doctor
Feb 4th, 2013, 06:06 PM
I thought this was a tough question. Red Winter is probably the best selection for the reasons that CantWaitForSeason3 stated. Also, it would make an enticing medias res introduction to the story if you've never heard it from the beginning.

turbo
Feb 5th, 2013, 07:37 AM
I agree that Red Winter is one of the better selections. And it has a one of the more graphic scenes of the story in the autopsy...recommend not eating during that part.

Osiris
Feb 5th, 2013, 02:32 PM
Based on the comments so far I think I'm going to go back in and listen to Red Winter again.

LiamKerrington
Feb 5th, 2013, 03:39 PM
Hi there,

"Red Winter" feels good. Since I "listened" to the chat Osiris and Kc had on the forum-chat about this, I must admit: I felt like throwing in chapter #33 as well as the big alternative to #27 or #36.

And yet I feel inclined to say that "Red Winter" would be a very bad call. Why so?
Red Winter tells three different stories:
1) The KODI experiment which ends with Michael speaking to Tanya revealing the bad situation in it;
2) you have the Banana-Crash, in which several new characters are introduced to the show and wich actually are not main characters and lack the potential to become such - I speak of the black-hawk crew and Karl Thomas. All important characters - but only for as long as there are certain scenes written for them; as kind of a transition you get the uprising conflict between Michael and Kimmet, and this transition leads to number 3:
3) You have the autopsy.
The big plus to those three scenes is that they address many different calm as well as tense situations on the show. But they lack one major thing: continuitiy. The unprepared audience gets insight into many different things and has to puzzle pieces together while having not enough pieces to get the proper understanding. And along this line the audience recognizes several different conflicts which "hand in there" without at least any deep insight, let alone any conclusion or something.

I read through Osiris's recommendation for #27. And I must say: I totally agree with Osiris - again, which makes me curious what's wrong with me. ;) To put it straight: #27 tells a story of its own. In contrary to most other chapters it is a stand-alone. Okokok. It has kind of an open start and open ending, like what you get on a regular basis with short stories; but, and this again similar to what you normaly receive with short stories delivered to your house, you have a major focus that keeps the attention of the audience straight through most of the hour. Thus I speak in favor of #27 ...

I would not agree with anyone to speak up in favor of #36, although this is one of the very few episodes which offer hope at the end of it. In #36 too many very different things are brought together which were prepared over many, many episodes. Thus #36 would be too much of a spoiler for what could happen in season #4. #27 "only" spoilers parts of what has happened up until then ...

All the best!
Liam

Osiris
Feb 10th, 2013, 05:14 PM
After listening to the remastered edition of Chapter thirty-three, I can safely say that it isn't reflective of the series at all. It spends too much time out of the world that we're familiar with. If you consider how much of the show revolves around the lives and relationships of people who aren't really mentioned in this episode. It feels like it falls outside of the world, focusing too much on characters that we're not connected to. I can appreciate wanting to expand the universe, and I love the episode, I just don't feel as though it really captures what the show is.

Of course, I'm speaking for myself when I say "what the show is." What I mean is "what the show is to me," which is more about the relationships between the characters and less about the world around them.